Thank you, Joshua, and good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us. Today I want to touch on the progress we have made regarding our strategy to develop and commercialize novel medicines for patients whose conditions are not adequately being treated by current therapies. In particular, I wanted to discuss the announcement we made this morning to focus that strategy on our late-stage pipeline in ocular disease, a decision that extends our cash runway through the end of 2021. During our recent R&D Day in New York we highlighted this statistically significant and clinically relevant data observed in late-stage clinical trials of our lead asset reproxalap in allergic conjunctivitis and dry eye disease. These conditions currently make up the majority of anterior ocular inflammatory disease, which affects more than 40% of the U.S. population and more than 1 billion people worldwide. The economic burden of ocular allergy and dry eye disease is expected to accelerate exacerbated by pollution, global warming, rising pollen counts and increasing urbanization. These trends play directly into our drug development initiatives for reproxalap as we noted during the R&D Day to-date reproxalap has demonstrated significant and clinically relevant effects on ocular itching in three distinct clinical models of allergic conjunctivitis, a conjunctival challenge trial, an allergen chamber clinical trial and a pilot field study in patients during allergy seasons. This extensive body of work which encompasses nearly 700 patients has helped to inform the ongoing INVIGORATE phase 3 trial. INVIGORATE which was initiated in January of 2020 will evaluate approximately 120 subjects in an allergen chamber. INVIGORATE is a randomized double masked crossover vehicle controlled phase 3 clinical trial powered to assess the efficacy and safety of 0.25% reproxalap topical ophthalmic solution compared to vehicle and consistent with our prior AC trials the primary endpoint INVIGORATE will again be subject reported ocular itching score. Patient enrollment is proceeding on schedule and we expect results from INVIGORATE in the second half of this year. We have an opportunity to be the first novel entrant in allergic conjunctivitis in decades and we believe we are well positioned to uniquely address this growing disease either as an adjunct treatment with antihistamines or in lieu of corticosteroids. Turning to part 2 of our RENEW phase 3 trial in dry eye disease reproxalap has now met the primary endpoint of symptom control in both part 1 of RENEW and the formulation phase 2 trial thus as noted during our R&D Day we have requested a meeting with the FDA regarding next steps in our development path. We will be providing an update on future development plans in dry eye disease following FDA feedback expected in the second half of 2020. At R&D Day, we presented data combining the three clinical trials where the formulation time points and dosing regimen in dry eye disease were the same. Over four weeks of therapy reproxalap was statistically superior to vehicle in both patient reported ocular dryness and investigator assessed fluorescein staining score. We also presented data from a head-to-head tolerability clinical trial of the current formulation of reproxalap and a novel formulation of reproxalap versus Xiidra which is recognized as a leading approved therapy for dry eye disease over one hour after dosing ocular discomfort, blurry vision and taste disturbance were statistically lower in both formulations of reproxalap treated patients than in Xiidra retreated patients results that we believe support the positive symptomatic effects observed in both the Phase 2 and RENEW Part 1 trials though we note that the trial compared only tolerability under the aforementioned conditions. Across an aggregate of 10 allergic conjunctivitis and dry eye disease trials, topical ocular reproxalap has been studied in more than 1,100 patients to date with no observed safety concerns, mild and transient installation site irritation is the most common reported adverse event. We believe there is no stronger validation of the potential benefits of an investigational product and the support of key opinion leaders and practicing healthcare professionals. So at the R&D Day it was especially gratifying to hear internationally renowned optometrist Paul Karpecki clinical director of the Kentucky Eye Institute discussed using reproxalap as approved as a first-line therapy for ocular surface disease. As Dr. Karpecki noted among dry disease patients the level of dissatisfaction with their current therapy is very high as many as 70% do not stay on treatment beyond three months. And parallel with our work in ocular surface disease enrollment is underway in the Phase 3 GUARD trial of ADX-2191 for the prevention of proliferative vitreous retinopathy or PVR, a rare but sight threatening condition that is the leading cause of failure retinal detachment surgery. A video shown during our recent R&D Day currently available on our website, highlights the significant unmet medical need of PVR through the perspectives of a patient and Mass Eye and Ears Dr. Dean Elliott who developed ADX-2191. We expect to provide an update on the progress of GUARD later this year. In light of all the progress we've made on our ocular disease pipeline this morning we announced the strategic decision to prioritize our near-term clinical development initiatives in allergic conjunctivitis, dry eye disease and PVR. Due to our prioritization of our late stage ophthalmology product candidates we have elected to place on hold further clinical development of topical dermal reproxalap for the treatment of ichthyosis associated with Sjögren Larsson Syndrome and ADX-1612 for the treatment of post transplant lymphoproliferative disorder. Consistent with our renewed emphasis on ocular disease we have appointed an ophthalmic expert Dr. James Gow as senior vice president of clinical development and we announced that Dr. David Clark Aldeyra's former chief medical officer is transitioning to a consulting role. On behalf the company and the board I want to thank Dr. Clark for his many contributions to Aldeyra during the past four years. He has played an important role in advancing our pipeline and we appreciate his desire to stay on and a consulting capacity. Dr. Gow comes to Aldeyra with 20 years of experience most recently as strategic global development lead for Xiidra on global clinical development projects at Novartis. He served in similar positions at Shire and Takeda and before that was in senior medical affairs roles at Inotek, Alcon and Bausch and Lomb. In terms of preclinical activities, our collaborative research agreement with Janssen Research and Development related to development of new systemic anti-inflammatory therapies has concluded consistent with our prioritization. However, we are continuing the development of ADX-103, an investigational RASP inhibitor for the treatment of retinal disease and expect to be in clinical testing in 2021. While ocular disease will be the primary focus of our near-term clinical development efforts, we also plan to continue to advance ADX-629, a novel orally administered RASPinhibitor we believe has broad applicability to a variety of immune-mediated diseases. Phase 1 clinical testing of ADX-629 has been completed. The top line data readout is expected in the second quarter of this year and the initiation of a Phase 2 clinical trial is planned for the second half 2020. Also moving forward is the investigator sponsored EUDARIO phase 2 trial of ADX-1612 in combination with platinum therapy and niraparib a PARP inhibitor in ovarian cancer patients. Based on information received from the investigator patient enrollment in this trial was expected to be completed in the first half of this year. Additional clinical work on ADX-1612 patients with mesothelioma is currently contingent on subsequent investigator funding. Looking ahead we have a number of expected clinical milestones in the coming quarters our Phase 3 programs and allergic conjunctivitis, dry eye disease and PVR represent compelling therapeutic approaches to address serious conditions not adequately addressed by current treatments. We are committed to developing novel drugs that improve patient outcomes and we believe that we are well-positioned to achieve that objective. Now let me turn the call back over to Joshua for his financial review.